Browse 2 homes new builds in Laverton, North Yorkshire from local developer agents.
Three bedroom properties represent a significant portion of the Laverton housing market, offering space for families with multiple reception rooms and gardens in many cases. Browse detached, semi-detached, and terraced options ranging across new residential developments.
£500k
2
0
52
Source: home.co.uk
Showing 2 results for 3 Bedroom Houses new builds in Laverton, North Yorkshire. The median asking price is £500,000.
Source: home.co.uk
Detached
1 listings
Avg £625,000
Semi-Detached
1 listings
Avg £375,000
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Laverton, North Yorkshire has only a slim trail of verified market evidence, which is not unusual in a small rural village where a handful of sales can skew the picture. Most buyers looking here are weighing up character homes, detached houses and countryside properties, not rows of flats or recent terraces. For the current market, our live listings from home.co.uk give the clearest view of what is actually available, as asking prices can move quickly when a village property appears. Value needs a property-by-property judgement, with condition, plot size and access carrying more weight than any broad regional average.
No active new-build schemes in Laverton were verified in the research pack, so existing homes and occasional one-off sales seem to set the tone locally. That changes the feel of the market. Rural demand is often led by lifestyle buyers, relocating families and downsizers looking for space, quiet and a slower pace. A Gloucestershire village with the same name did appear in the research, but homedata.co.uk figures for that postcode should not be used as a guide for this North Yorkshire Laverton. The useful bit for buyers is simple: watch live listings, compare like with like, and be ready when the right home comes up.

Laverton’s pull is its space. This is the sort of small North Yorkshire village that tends to suit buyers who want open countryside nearby and a calmer daily routine than they would get in a larger town. The research pack does not give verified population or demographic figures for this exact village, so we are not dressing the page up with invented detail. For plenty of movers, the rural setting is the point, a home that feels settled, private and away from the rush.
Life in Laverton is likely to mean looking outwards for some everyday needs, with shops, services and travel links sitting beyond the village rather than all around you. That will not bother everyone. Buyers who want a longer garden, more privacy or a less crowded setting may see it as a fair trade. Around many small North Yorkshire villages, the landscape is a mix of farmland, lanes and scattered houses, which is one reason detached homes and character properties often draw attention. If lifestyle is driving the move as much as the price, this is a place where patience in the search matters.
In a village, amenities need a proper check before you get too attached to a house. Food shopping, healthcare, schools and regular leisure plans all sit in that calculation, especially if you rely on them every week. Broadband, parking, garden space and storage also deserve more scrutiny than they might in a denser urban street, because they shape rural living day after day. We would look at the village as part of the purchase, not just the property inside the boundary.
The research pack did not verify school performance data for Laverton, North Yorkshire, so naming a local school list here would be misleading. For a small village, catchment can matter more than league-table position, as the nearest suitable primary or secondary school may be in another settlement or a market town. North Yorkshire Council handles school admissions, and families should check the exact address before committing to a purchase. If school travel will be part of the week, try the journey at the time you would actually make it.
For families, rural school planning works best when it starts early. Admissions, home-to-school transport and the exact catchment line can all affect whether a Laverton address suits the move. Sixth forms and further education choices will usually stretch beyond the village boundary, so the commute can matter as much as the school name. Where education is a deciding factor, we would compare Laverton homes with nearby alternatives before an offer goes in.

Public transport can be limited in a small North Yorkshire village, and Laverton is best judged on the basis that many residents will drive for work, school and weekly errands. The research pack does not include a verified bus timetable or rail summary for the village, so travel times need checking before viewings, not after. Commuters should look at the nearest rail station, the daily roads and parking at both ends. A house can look ideal online, then feel quite different once the morning journey is tested.
Winter travel, delivery access and guest parking are easy to overlook, but in a rural village they can decide how convenient a home feels. Good access may be worth more than a little extra internal space if your household is in and out of Laverton every day. Walking and cycling might be useful for leisure, although they are unlikely to replace a car in a settlement like this. Before making an offer, time the work commute, the school run and the trip to the nearest large shop.

Start by researching Laverton alongside the wider North Yorkshire area, so the differences in budget, commute and lifestyle are clear. Listings in small villages can be scarce, which makes alerts and close market watching genuinely useful when a suitable home appears.
Get a mortgage agreement in principle before lining up viewings. Sellers usually favour buyers who can act quickly, and that can count for a lot in a rural market where the best house may attract attention as soon as it is listed.
Décor is only part of the story. Parking, access, broadband, garden boundaries and the realities of village living deserve just as much attention. Where there is land, outbuildings or a shared drive, ask early about rights of way and who maintains what.
For many properties, especially older homes or houses altered over time, a RICS Level 2 Survey is a sensible next move. In a village setting, we would also ask our surveyors to pay close attention to damp, roof condition, drainage and any signs of movement in walls or outbuildings.
Your conveyancer needs to look carefully at title, searches and any restrictions affecting a rural purchase. Access arrangements, private drainage, boundaries and less obvious rights can all matter, even if a viewing made the house feel straightforward.
Once your solicitor is satisfied and the mortgage offer is ready, exchange contracts can take place and a completion date can be agreed. Keep some spare money aside for removals, insurance and the first few weeks of settling into a village home.
The research pack did not confirm flood mapping, conservation designations or listed-building concentrations for Laverton, North Yorkshire, so the exact address should be checked rather than assumed. Rural plots can have very different site histories, even from one house to the next. If the property has older stonework, an extension or a converted outbuilding, ask the seller for planning papers, building regulation approval and records of historic repairs. Sorting that out early can prevent a lot of stress later.
Rural homes often need more attention on access, drainage, roof coverings and insulation than a standard suburban house. Shared drives, private water supplies, septic tanks and field boundaries can all affect daily use, even when they are barely visible in the photos. Leasehold flats are uncommon in villages, but if one appears, ground rent, service charges and the remaining lease term still need careful review. We would also test phone signal and broadband performance, as both become more important outside a main town.
Thin village markets put extra weight on resale appeal. In Laverton, the features a future buyer is likely to value include good parking, a sensible layout, usable outdoor space and easy access. A home that feels private without becoming awkward to run will usually speak to a broader group of buyers, particularly if it has been well maintained and does not hide repair costs. The right inspection now gives you a clearer purchase and a better grip on the long-term budget.

We do not have a verified sold-price series for Laverton, North Yorkshire in the research pack, so we are not going to invent a local average. The only price evidence returned related to a different Laverton in Broadway, Gloucestershire, where homedata.co.uk records an average of £874,500 over the last year, down 17% on the year and 21% below the 2016 peak of £1,102,500. That is not a benchmark for North Yorkshire, but it does show how much exact location matters. For Laverton in North Yorkshire, set your budget by comparing live asking prices on home.co.uk with recent local sales.
Council tax is not one-size-fits-all in Laverton. North Yorkshire Council sets bands property by property, and the band is based on valuation banding rather than the current asking price. Rural homes can fall across several bands, so a buyer should check the exact entry on the council’s records or ask the agent to confirm it. Do this early, as it feeds straight into monthly running costs from the day you move in.
The research pack did not return verified school rankings or named local schools for this exact village, so a claimed best-school list would not be reliable. In a small North Yorkshire location, the right answer usually comes down to catchment, journey time and whether the school run fits the household routine. Before offering, families should check the admissions map, nearby primary and secondary options, and any school transport arrangements. If education sits high on the list, compare Laverton with neighbouring villages as well as the village itself.
Laverton should be viewed as a rural North Yorkshire village where public transport may be thinner than in a town. The research pack gives no verified bus or rail summary for the exact location, so check the nearest station, bus routes and peak-time journey lengths yourself. Many buyers in villages like this still depend on a car for work, shopping and school runs. Regular commuters should test the route before making an offer, rather than discovering the weak points after completion.
It can be, although the investment case is not the same as a city-centre postcode. Village homes often suit long-term owner-occupiers, lifestyle movers and buyers who prize space, so demand can be steady even when sales are infrequent. Lower turnover also means resale appeal, condition and access deserve close thought. If you are buying to let or may sell later, focus on features that broaden the buyer pool, such as parking, garden space and good energy efficiency.
Stamp duty follows the price paid, not the village name. For 2024-25, the standard thresholds are 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million and 12% above that. First-time buyers pay 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. As a simple example, a £300,000 home bought by a non-first-time buyer would usually mean £2,500 of SDLT.
In a village purchase, the practical checks can matter as much as the finish of the kitchen or bathroom. Look closely at access, parking, broadband, drainage, roof condition and any hint of boundary or rights-of-way issues. For an older home, ask about previous repairs, extension paperwork and anything already flagged in a survey. Those points affect how easy the property is to live in, and how simple it may be to sell later.
Stamp duty is one of the main costs to build into a Laverton purchase, along with the deposit, legal fees, survey costs and removals. The current standard SDLT thresholds are 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million and 12% above £1.5 million. First-time buyers pay 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above that level. A careful budget matters just as much as finding the right house.
A simple purchase budget is often the easiest way to keep control before an offer is made. Add the solicitor’s fee, search costs, survey, mortgage valuation if needed, and a buffer for moving day, storage and insurance. Older village homes may also need money set aside for follow-up work picked up by the survey. We recommend getting a mortgage agreement in principle first, so your price range and likely stamp duty position are clear before viewings begin.

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This calculator provides estimates for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. Estimates based on 4.5% interest rate, repayment mortgage. Actual rates depend on your circumstances.
Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.